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The Tibetan Prayer Wheel House offers visitors a tangible experience of a common feature of Tibetan culture. The turning of prayer wheels is a practice for developing compassion. It is central to Tibetan Buddhism. 

This prayer wheel house was manufactured using traditional materials and techniques in the Kagyu Samye Ling Tibetan Buddhist Monastery in southern Scotland.

A house like frame with a gold roof and red pillars and decorated surfaces. There are five brown spinning prayer wheels inside.
Tibetan Prayer Wheel House, National Museums Scotland. Credit: © Kagyu Samye Ling Buddhist Monastery; Image © National Museums Scotland.

What do prayer wheels mean to Tibetan Buddhists?

Prayer wheels are unique to Tibetan Buddhism. They come in all sizes and are used throughout Tibet by individuals of every social rank and status.

The turning of the wheels activates the blessing of the mantras within. This creates good karma and removes obstacles to enlightenment for the benefit of all beings. Each clockwise revolution releases the mantras and is equivalent to reciting the same number of mantras within the prayer wheel.

A round silver lidded case with Tibetan script embossed on its surface attached to a wooden handle. There is a small chain with a piece of wood at its end attached to the silver case.
Mani lag khor (hand prayer wheel), circular silver case embossed with Tibetan script, with printed prayers inside, with metal weight hanging from chain, rotating on wooden handle, used by Tibetan Buddhists to release prayers into the air. Tibet, Lhasa, 19th century AD. (A.1909.442)

Planning the Prayer Wheel House

Over the course of 2008 and 2009, a series of meetings between the museum and the monastery took place. The design, ornamentation, and materials to be used, as well as the size and number of the prayer wheels, were discussed.

During the design phase, designer and Buddhist, Yeshe Palmo worked together with Mark Bradley, one of the Buddhist craftsmen at Kagyu Samye Ling. Several sketches of proposed prayer wheel designs were drawn before one was finally agreed on with the museum.

A black and while sketch of people walking around a large round decorated object
Early concept sketch for the Prayer Wheel House. Credit: © Kagyu Samye Ling Buddhist Monastery; Image © National Museums Scotland.
A detail of a wooden object with colourful painted and engraved detailing in red, blue, yellow, and green.
Painting the Prayer Wheel House. Credit: © Kagyu Samye Ling Buddhist Monastery; Image © National Museums Scotland.

Inside the Prayer Wheel House

Inside each prayer wheel cylinder is a tightly wound roll of printed mantras. Mantras are short Buddhist invocations of several syllables. Each of the 1,400 paper sheets within each cylinder is printed with about 23,000 of these mantras. This means that each cylinder contains 32,200,000 printed mantras!

In order to be effective, the consecration of the mantra sheets required a blessing. Yeshe Palmo and Mark Bradley sprinkled saffron water and consecration substance on every sheet of the mantras. The consecrated sheets were then wrapped tightly around the central axis of the cylinders, before being inserted into the cylinders. Finally the cylinders were sealed and another Buddhist, Akong Rinpoche, blessed the prayer wheels.

Two images side by side. One image shows a woman wearing a mask pulling a yellow cover over a roll of paper, the second image shows the woman pulling from a paper roll mounted on a wooden spool.
Wrapping the sheets around the axis and pulling a cover over the roll. Credit: © Kagyu Samye Ling Buddhist Monastery; Image © National Museums Scotland.

Creating the Tibetan prayer wheel house

In this film, Buddhists from Tibet and from the Samye Ling monastery talk more about the prayer wheel tradition, and how our prayer wheel house was made.


The Prayer Wheel House (museum reference V.2009.13) is on display in the Living Lands gallery at the National Museum of Scotland.